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DURHAM, N.C. – Caleb Love waved goodbye to the Cameron Crazies as he walked off of Coach K Court. 

In what will likely be his final game against Duke basketball at Cameron Indoor Stadium, Love helped the 11th-ranked Wildcats earn a 78-73 victory against the third-ranked Blue Devils on Friday night. 

“It feels great. Coming in, I knew I had my guys and my guys had my back,” Love said from just outside of the visiting locker room at Cameron. 

“Just coming in, I knew I was confident, I knew we was confident. Coming into this game, we were prepared. Hats off to them, (Duke) had a great game plan. We stuck to ours and we got the win.” 

The former Tar Heel knocked down four free throws in the final 17.4 seconds to earn his fifth win in eight tries against Duke. In his first seven games against the Blue Devils, Love averaged 17.7 points. 

“I’m not surprised he made ‘em. I told him he deserved that moment,” Arizona coach Tommy Lloyd said. 

“I don’t know if – I don’t have my glasses – so I can’t read the stats, so I don’t know if he played good or bad. It felt like he was playing a little quick on some stuff. I can imagine it’s a pretty emotional moment. He’s a competitive guy. But for him to calmly step up and go 4-for-4 from the line down the stretch, it says a lot about him as a competitor.” 

Love didn’t fare as well Friday as he has in the past, finishing with 11 points, three assists and six turnovers in 33 minutes. But his clutch free throws and a wacky play to end the first half were the highlights that helped him deliver another dagger to Duke fans. 

“Obviously, it was on my mind for a little minute,” Love said of the matchup. “As soon as I seen they were on the schedule, my eyes got bigger. We came in and we handled business, and that’s all that matters.” 

Just before the end of the first half, Love banked in a 3-pointer from the right wing and had some choice words for anyone in his area as Arizona carried a 41-33 lead into halftime. 

Arizona vs. Duke highlights

What Caleb Love said about UNC basketball and his time with the Tar Heels

Caleb Love had “Tar Heel 4L” written in black on the heel of his right shoe as a nod to his time with the Tar Heels. 

“That’s what I am: I’m a Tar Heel for life,” Love said. “Regardless of what differences or what happened in the past, I still got love for Tar Heel nation. I love them.” 

Love scored 1,476 points – averaging 14.6 points per game – in 101 games for the Tar Heels, and his 200 3-pointers rank eighth in UNC history. Love’s 3-pointer in the final 30 seconds against Duke at the 2022 Final Four is commemorated in UNC’s basketball museum.

But it’s clear he’s happy with where he is now. After Friday night’s win, why wouldn’t he be? 

“It felt different a little bit, just because I was with a different team,” Love said. “I’m glad that I’m here and we did what we were supposed to do tonight.”

Staff writer Rodd Baxley can be reached at rbaxley@fayobserver.com or @RoddBaxley on X.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Megan Rapinoe and Ali Krieger began their National Women’s Soccer League careers playing in front of sparse crowds and on far-flung fields not suited for a professional league. Only nine of that season’s 88 matches were on television, and three of those were the NWSL semifinals and title game. Every day, it seemed, was a battle for resources and respect.

As they prepare to end their careers in Saturday’s NWSL Championship game (8 p.m. ET) between the OL Reign and Gotham FC, Rapinoe and Krieger can take pride at how different the league is now, a transformation they helped drive. 

Over the last 11 years, the NWSL has grown from eight teams to 12, with three expansion teams already announced and a fourth soon to come. U.S. Soccer no longer runs the league, and the players have both a union and a collective bargaining agreement that has significantly boosted salaries. The NWSL is a magnet for sponsors, and on Thursday it announced a blockbuster four-year, $240 million media rights deal.

It is a league that is no longer simply surviving but thriving.

“I walk away so proud and so happy, not only about my contributions to the game but the era I played in, knowing the game is in such a better place. And that’s a testament to all the players who played in this generation and played in this league,” Rapinoe said Friday.  

“I get to walk away smiling no matter what.”

It has not always been easy. Three of the original eight teams moved or were disbanded, and a fourth, Sky Blue, was rebranded as Gotham FC. Sponsors, especially the big-name ones, were hard to come by in the early days.

Worst was the abuse scandal that rocked the league two years ago and led to the ousters of two of the NWSL’s most high-profile coaches.

Horrific as it was, however, it’s also been something of a watershed moment for the NWSL and its participants. Players became empowered in the aftermath, able to demand systemic changes necessary for their basic safety that have also benefitted the league. Commissioner Jessica Berman, hired in the aftermath, saw the NWSL’s commercial value in a way no one else had and has capitalized on it.

“What I’m most proud of is … no matter what team you’re on, no matter where you’re from in this country and who you play for, at the end of the day, we have each other’s backs as a league and as players in the league. We have powers in numbers,” Krieger said.  

“We know how to fight for one another. We know how to fight for what’s best for this league and for these players,” the Gotham defender added. “(I’m) leaving this game better than where we found it.”

All you need to do is look at this final.

It will be broadcast on CBS. In primetime. It’s gotten extensive coverage this week, by mainstream media as well as soccer-specific outlets. The storyline of Rapinoe and Krieger, longtime friends and U.S. Women’s National Team teammates, who are each seeking her first title in her final game, has helped, but attention on the game has grown exponentially since the NWSL began.

A fanfest and skills challenge also were added, giving the weekend more of a “big event” feel.

“This final is what we deserve,” said Krieger, who played for the title in 2016, when she was with the Washington Spirit. “The level of professionalism, it has definitely been tremendous to see the growth.”

And Rapinoe and Krieger are both big reasons for that.

Krieger is still one of the game’s best defenders. At 39, she was named this season to the NWSL’s Best XI for a fourth time. But her pride and dedication to club play sent a message to other players about the importance of the league.

When Krieger was exiled from the USWNT following the 2015 World Cup and prior to the 2019 competition, she didn’t sulk or pout. She buckled down, and it was her play with the Orlando Pride that ultimately made her impossible for then-USWNT coach Jill Ellis to ignore.

“(Rapinoe) has transcended this game, fought so much for equality. When I think of Krieger, I think of somebody who pours her heart and gives to everybody,” said Gotham forward Lynn Williams, who is club teammates with Krieger and has played with Rapinoe on the USWNT.

“I hope that when both of them step aside, they feel the game is in a good position. That we can take on that burden and continue to fight and push,” Williams added. “The league is in such a better place, but it has so much further it needs to go.”

Either Rapinoe or Krieger will end her career with her first title. Both will leave the field knowing the league is in a better place, and they helped make that happen.

Follow USA TODAY Sports columnist Nancy Armour on social media @nrarmour.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., unveiled a short-term spending plan on Saturday aimed at averting a government shutdown when federal funding runs out on Nov. 17.

The two-step proposal would fund part of the government until Jan. 19, and the rest until Feb. 2. A senior GOP aide told Fox News Digital on Friday that they are aiming for a Tuesday House-wide vote.

Supporters of a staggered short-term bill, known as a continuing resolution (CR), argue it puts targeted pressure on lawmakers to achieve their goals at an incremental rate. 

Johnson’s CR includes no additional funding for Ukraine or Israel, but it does extend key programs under the Farm Bill, another must-pass piece of legislation that expires this year. 

The speaker said his plan would avoid forcing lawmakers to make rushed decisions up against the holiday season by extending funding through the new year. He also championed its exclusion of President Biden’s $106 billion supplemental aid request for Ukraine, Israel, Taiwan and the southern border. 

In a one-page summary of the plan, Johnson’s office said the approach would ‘prevent another irresponsible ‘Christmas omnibus’ spending monstrosity.’

‘This two-step continuing resolution is a necessary bill to place House Republicans in the best position to fight for conservative victories,’ Johnson said in a statement after it was unveiled.

‘The bill will stop the absurd holiday-season omnibus tradition of massive, loaded up spending bills introduced right before the Christmas recess. Separating out the CR from the supplemental funding debates places our conference in the best position to fight for fiscal responsibility, oversight over Ukraine aid, and meaningful policy changes at our Southern border.’

The plan first forces lawmakers to reckon with some of the traditionally less controversial appropriations bills — those concerning military construction and Veterans Affairs; Agriculture; Energy and Water; Transportation and Housing and Urban Development. The remaining eight appropriations bills must be worked out by Feb. 2.

House Republicans have pledged to pass 12 individual spending bills for the next fiscal year as opposed to a mammoth ‘omnibus’ funding bill, which the previous Democratically-controlled Congress passed last year. 

A majority of Republican lawmakers, including Johnson allies, have signaled they understand a CR is needed to give themselves more time to cobble together a deal and avoid a shutdown. 

But some GOP hardliners are already coming out against it for extending the ‘omnibus’ priorities they opposed.

‘My opposition to the clean CR just announced by the Speaker to the [House GOP] cannot be overstated. Funding [former Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif.] level spending & policies for 75 days – for future ‘promises,’’ House Freedom Caucus Policy Chair Chip Roy, R-Texas, wrote on X after a House GOP members-only conference call.

Fox News’ Chad Pergram contributed to this report

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Today’s report features the Zweig Breadth Thrust, which was developed by the late, and great, Marty Zweig. Zweig appeared regularly on Wall Street Week, contributed to Barrons, published The Zweig Forecast and wrote Winning on Wall Street in 1986. Among other things, his timeless book shows us how to “spot market trends early”. The Zweig Breadth Thrust does not feature in the book, but I wholeheartedly recommend this book for its enduring wisdom and market insights.

A Zweig breadth thrust triggered for NYSE stocks in early November. I say NYSE stocks because Zweig used NYSE breadth for his thrust indicator. The indicator is the 10-day EMA of NYSE Advances divided by NYSE Advances plus NYSE Declines. The formula comes from Greg Morris’ book, the Encyclopedia of Breadth Indicators.

The chart below shows the Zweig Breadth Thrust (!BINYBT) in the top window and the NY Composite in the lower window. The green shading shows the indicator surging from below .40 to above .615 within a 10 day window (ending November 3rd). The blue shadings show two signals that just missed the 10 day cutoff. The May surge took 12 days and the March surge took 11 days.

My research shows the NYSE Zweig Breadth Thrust triggering six times since early 2009. Despite infrequent signals, the rationale behind the indicator is solid. The indicator is designed to identify a deep dip with the move below .40. This is the setup. The signal triggers with an exceptionally sharp upside thrust after this dip (above .615). And, it must all happen within 10 days. This means it identifies an abrupt and sharp shift in the markets. These kinds of moves often occur at “V” bottoms, such as March 2009 and December 2018.

Something, however, is missing. And those somethings are Nasdaq stocks. I suspect Zweig used NYSE breadth because he developed it when the big board (NYSE) dominated trading. Things have changed and the Nasdaq is the place to be right now. A modern breadth indicator should include Nasdaq and NYSE stocks, as well as large-caps, mid-caps and small-caps. I would suggest S&P 1500 stocks for such an indicator.

TrendInvestorPro took the Zweig Breadth Thrust (ZBT) to the next level this week. First, we coded this indicator using S&P 1500 stocks (ZBT1500). Second, we quantified signals with a backtest. ZBT1500 signals are much more frequent and a signal also triggered on November 3rd. Entry is only half of the equation so I also added an exit condition based on the Average True Range (ATR). Click here to access the full report at TrendInvestorPro.   

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Not only does this year’s NWSL championship mark the end of the season.

It also marks the end of the careers of USWNT legends Megan Rapinoe and Ali Krieger.

Rapinoe’s OL Reign takes on Krieger’s NJ/NY Gotham FC to take the title. Both teams have the opportunity to win their first championship before the veterans leave the beautiful game for good.

Gotham FC made it to the final after beating defending champion Portland Thorns and Sophia Smith in the semifinals, 1-0. They were the sixth, and lowest, seed in the playoffs. The OL Reign reach the match as the fourth seed after winning, 1-0, against Alex Morgan and the San Diego Wave FC.

No matter who captures the trophy, four-time WNBA champion Sue Bird will win. She is engaged to Rapinoe and is part of the ownership group of Gotham FC. The former Seattle Storm star made a joke on social media that she needs a split jersey a la NFL mom Donna Kelce for the big game.

Here is everything you need to know for the 2023 NWSL championship:

What time does the 2023 NWSL championship start?

The 2023 NWSL championship kicks off at 8 p.m. ET on Saturday at Snapdragon Stadium in San Diego, California.

How to watch the 2023 NWSL championship on TV?

The 2023 NWSL championship will air on television on CBS.

How to live stream the 2023 NWSL championship?

The NWSL final will be livestreamed on CBSSports.com and Paramount+.

Who is playing in the 2023 NWSL championship?

The OL Reign play NJ/NY Gotham FC in the 2023 NWSL championship.

The OL Reign finished the season 9-8-5 while NJ/NY Gotham FC went 8-7-7. The two clubs split their regular-season matches against each other.

Both teams feature USWNT stars playing in their final match. Forward Megan Rapinoe caps off her illustrious career playing for OL Reign. Defender Ali Kreiger takes a bow after playing for NJ/NY Gotham FC. Both players have won two World Cups together.

Rapinoe is tied for second in the NWSL with five assists and the Reign is tied for second with 31 goals on the season.

Gotham FC has scored 28 goals this year and is led by seven netted balls from Lynn Williams, who is also on the USWNT.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Ron Holland thought it through. Even after the 18-year-old star basketball player signed a letter of intent to play for Texas, he continued mulling his options.

The 6-foot-6 guard-forward determined a season in the G League with the Ignite instead of college basketball was his best option to prepare for an NBA career.

“They can just give me the blueprint of how to succeed in the NBA on and off the court,” Holland, the projected No. 1 pick in the 2024 NBA draft, told USA TODAY Sports. “I trust them with everything that they had (on) their resume. They have put top picks in the draft and they’re succeeding in the NBA right now.”

Holland, who played at Duncanville (Texas) High, makes his G League debut Friday against the Ontario Clippers in Henderson, Nevada, where the Ignite make their home. The Ignite, who are not affiliated with an NBA team and serve as a draft prep program for elite prospects, has become a viable pathway to the NBA.

In the 2024 draft, three G League Ignite players are projected top-10 picks: Holland at No. 1, forward Matas Buzelis at No. 4 and forward Izan Almansa at No. 8.

That follows a trend since the Ignite began play in 2020. In the past three NBA drafts, teams have selected 10 G League Ignite players, which is more than any college team or elite program in that span. Four G League Ignite players were taken in the 2023 draft, including Scoot Henderson at No. 3; three were drafted in 2022, including Dyson Daniels at No. 8; and three were chosen in 2021, including Jalen Green at No. 2 and Jonathan Kuminga as No. 7.

Holland could be the first Ignite player to go No. 1, and he has adopted a pragmatic approach to the draft.

“Growing up as a kid, the obvious answer is that you want to be the No. 1 one pick,” he said. “But once you understand the business and everything about this, you’re here to have a long career. You want to go to the best fit, and that’s what I’m looking for.

“If that’s No. 1, that’s amazing because that’s two dreams accomplished in one. But if that means I got to go 2, 3, 4 just to get to the right team, then that’s just what it has to be.”

Holland is a wing player with the ability to score and defend. He thrives in the open court, possesses an improving jump shot, especially on 3-pointers, and had a mid-range game off the dribble. He scored 33 points in a preseason game against Australia pro team Perth Wildcats.

“My goals and expectations for this season are to honestly reach my max potential when it comes to just being down here and getting everything that I need up out of this,” he said.

The Ignite are set up to help Holland focus on individual skills, improvement and what’s required to be successful in the NBA, including helping with off-the-court business, such as sponsorship deals. It calls for maturity, too.

Holland’s mom, Tarasha Holland, liked the idea of her son attending the University of Texas and playing near home. But she also concluded, “It wasn’t an easy decision for me to lay back, but I know my role as a parent,” she said. “I don’t know basketball, so I don’t know what it is that he was looking for when it came to basketball. I had to realize, ‘Hey, I’m not the one that has to play.’ It wasn’t my lane.”

Like most mothers, Tarasha was also hesitant to send her son to Nevada alone and considered renting a home and having family there with him. “I frowned up on it at first. I kind of frowned upon it a little bit now,” she said. “But I think it’s helping him build who he needs to be in the long run. He’s being independent.”

Holland is enjoying the transition from student to professional basketball player — including making meals which sometimes includes chicken alfredo, a dish he learned to make from his dad, Ron Sr., a professional chef who NBA player Wesley Matthews hired last summer to make meals while Matthews and his family were on vacation.

“I wake up, go to practice, stay after to shoot, come home, cook, eat and then get back in the gym,” he said. “I’m here for a few months, and I’ve got to make the most out of it, so I’m trying to work on my craft as much as I can.”

Holland is also self-aware for an 18-year-old. He already is focused on his mental health. He learned the importance of that from his mom who empathizes with the pressure teens face today — whether in school, sports and work combined with social media.

Last summer, Holland conducted a youth basketball camp that also addressed mental health. Holland said he will shut off lights, put down his phone, do breathing exercises and find calm.

“I realized most players need an outlet too,” he said. “Players need somebody to talk to because you never know what they’re going through when it comes to basketball or with their family or with their girlfriend or anything.”

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Southern California quarterback Caleb Williams opened up on social media about showing his emotions after he was seen crying in his mother’s arms after a 52-42 loss to Washington last Saturday.

Williams, the reigning Heisman Trophy winner, is projected to be a top pick if he leaves school in next year’s NFL draft.

Williams said on social media that he is an emotional person and wants to spread mental health awareness.

“I go out every single day, blood, sweat and tears. I give my all on every single play, every chance that I get. I’ve been an advocate for mental health, show your emotions and express yourself,’ Williams said.

OPINION: When Caleb Williams cried after USC loss, what did you see? There’s only one right answer.

‘It’s something that I’ve been doing since I was young, and now on a national level being able to try and share that awareness with the public. Me doing just what I did on Saturday, even though it was far from what I was trying to do, it showed and spread that kind of awareness.’

Williams is completing 69 percent of his passes for 2,958 yards with 28 touchdowns and four interceptions this season for the Trojans, who have lost three of their last four games.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Houston Texans rookie quarterback C.J. Stroud threw for 470 yards and five touchdowns last week. That was impressive. But it might not be the most impressive thing Stroud has done. Stroud’s journey actually begins years ago but I want to start with something more recent. Let me explain. Please pay close attention.

So much about that big day on the field starts months ago off of it with the bloated nonsense that is the NFL’s draft process. Stroud spent weeks leading up to it answering questions about leaked test results. It’s called the S2 Cognitive Test and measures various football adjacent variants that the NFL believes can be indicative of how a player will process the remarkable speeds and decision-making required to play in the NFL.

The leak showed (maybe) that Stroud performed poorly on the S2 which forced Stroud and his camp into damage control. The entire thing was silly and stupid but many things about the NFL’s draft process are silly and stupid.

It was reported that Stroud had the lowest score of any of the quarterbacks in that draft class. However, S2 co-founder, Brandon Ally, seemed to insinuate that some of the leaked scores were inaccurate, and while not saying directly that Stroud’s score was, he definitely seemed to insinuate it. He also said that some of the leaks may have been purposefully misleading for ‘narrative purposes.’

‘The day that those leaks happened, my phone was blowing up from general managers and our attorney,’ Ally told the Pat McAfee Show. ‘We can’t speak on specifics. What I will say is the list of scores that I have seen, two of those scores are not accurate. They’re not accurate at all. Some of the reason could be for narrative purposes. The other reason is that they don’t have context, so somebody could have gotten a list of very early scores.’

NFL STATS CENTRAL: The latest NFL scores, schedules, odds, stats and more.

‘One of the particular athletes on that list I know had a difficult time making his way to the all-star game, things were delayed,’ Ally explained. ‘He was in high demand. He was hungry, tired, it was 11 p.m., didn’t want to do it. He was frustrated. We administered the test because we’re asked to. We knew at that point in time, hey, we’re going to get you again. We’ll get you at your Pro Day, your 30 visit. We did that and his score is significantly higher than what it was being reported in the media. I’m not saying that it was C.J. Stroud. But for context purposes, the scores that were leaked, there are a couple of them that are inaccurate and there needs to be context behind that.’

‘It’s football,’ Stroud said at the time, ‘I’m not a test taker.’

It’s entirely possible (and it’s happened before in NFL draft history) that fake numbers, or at least numbers without proper context, were leaked to portray Stroud as not intelligent, hoping he’d fall in the draft to another team, maybe even the team that leaked the results in the first place. If that happened it’s remarkably nefarious.

At the time, it did significant damage to the image of Stroud, and it’s possible it was all untrue.

What has Stroud done since those leaks? He was drafted second overall. At one point this season, Stroud became only the sixth quarterback in league history to throw for at least 1,200 yards with zero interceptions in his first four regular season games. The others? It’s not a bad list: Aaron Rodgers (2020), Patrick Mahomes (2018 and 2019), Drew Brees (2018), Tom Brady (2015 and 2017) and Peyton Manning (2013).

The draft process reeks of wonkiness, an overreliance on goofy testing, and tactical leaks. Instead of becoming a cautionary tale, however, Stroud developed into a remarkable quarterback savant. He’s decoding and deciphering defenses with the kind of experience you see with veteran quarterbacks. Let Stroud cook? He’s Top Chef, rookie version.

“As a rookie, I would say that he’s really good because he knows when and why, which I think is rare for a rookie,” Texans offensive coordinator Bobby Slowik said. “A lot of times — like in college, he definitely did it. Without a doubt, it showed up on his college tape. It was really neat to see him do it on his (top) 30 visit and our Zooms and stuff with him.

‘You could tell he had a good understanding in college of why he was trying to look somebody off, and then that’s only grown since he’s gotten to the NFL and growing within our scheme, where I think initially when we first got to camp, you go through this period where you get so used to doing it that it’s a little too much and then you bring it back to balance it out and then it starts growing again. ‘Oh, now I understand on this concept — this is why I may want to put this defender here’ and it just keeps building and building. Obviously, you get in a game playing situation, and you attack specific coverages and specific defenders — he’s been awesome in that regard.’

These are the initial things you need to know about Stroud. There’s something else you must know. It’s another thing he’s overcome to reach this point.

His father, Coleridge Bernard Stroud, in 2016 got 38 years to life after pleading guilty to charges of carjacking, kidnapping and robbery. Stroud was in middle school when his father first went to prison. He’s currently at Folsom State Prison in California.

After throwing for almost 500 yards, Stroud used part of his postgame press conference to address his father’s situation.

How did AFC North – with four playoff contenders – become NFL’s most cutthroat division?

“Our criminal justice system isn’t right, and it’s something that I need to probably be a little more vocal about, because what he’s going through is not right,” he said. “He called me this week, and we got to talk, and I’m praying for the situation and a reform, and the people with reform are helping me a little bit. But I think just letting it be known that it’s not just my dad’s situation, but the whole criminal justice system is corrupt.”

Don’t confuse this part of Stroud’s story with the tired narratives you often see about Black men and absent fathers that are full of stereotypes and falsities about the Black family. It also shouldn’t be forgotten or overlooked that there are victims of what Stroud was convicted of doing. No one is sugarcoating that.

There were moments when Stroud could have faltered. Other players in his position have. The leaked test scores could have led to him lashing out. His father being imprisoned when he was so young could have possibly derailed his football future before it even started. There could have been disasters. But here he is. On the grandest of stages and performing well.

This is the Stroud, all of him, that we should know.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Michigan football program is embracing the ‘us against the world’ mentality amidst the sign-stealing scandal.

At the time, Harbaugh was serving a self-imposed suspension after an offseason of negotiations with the NCAA over four Level II violations that reportedly occurred back in the 2020 season, and a Level I violation when the NCAA claimed he misled them.

According to several reports, Harbaugh was on the flight with the team when news of the punishment emerged.

The Big Ten ruled that Michigan violated the conference’s sportsmanship policy for ‘conducting an impermissible, in-person scouting operation over multiple years, resulting in an unfair competitive advantage that compromised the integrity of competition.’

Michigan is alleged to have constructed a scheme to send multiple people to games of future opponents in order to scout, record and decode the signals for offensive and defensive play calls. The reported mastermind of the scheme is Connor Stalions, a team staffer who resigned last week.

While the NCAA is investigating the claims, the conference’s athletic directors and coaches have urged Big Ten Commissioner Tony Petitti to take action as U-M (9-0, 6-0 Big Ten, ranked third in College Football Playoff standings) remains a major player in the national championship picture.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Virginia’s Perris Jones is still in Louisville, a school official said Friday evening, one day after the running back was immobilized and carted off the field after being injured on a hard hit against No. 11 Louisville.

Football spokesman Jim Daves said in a text message to The Associated Press on Friday that Jones remained in Louisville, and that was all the information he could provide.

Earlier Friday, the school announced that Jones had ‘regained movement in all of his extremities.’

Jones was taken off the field on a stretcher and taken to U of L Medical Center following a scary collision in Thursday night’s game against No. 11 Louisville.

Jones took a massive hit as he moved up the field after catching a swing pass on a second-and-27 play in the final minute of the third quarter. The hit jarred the ball loose but it was scooped up by Malik Washington, who scampered into the end zone to give UVA a 20-14 lead.

But the celebration was short-lived as it was immediately clear Jones needed medical attention. The ESPN broadcast said trainers were immediately on the field to assist Jones, who was placed onto a backboard and taken off the field on a cart.

Players kneeled as Jones was attended to. When Jones was placed onto the cart, the entire Virginia team came to surround him.

The game eventually resumed, and Virginia kicked the extra point to go up 21-14. Louisville rallied to win 31-24.

In his postgame press conference, Virginia coach Tony Elliott said he was receiving ‘encouraging’ news from the hospital about Jones’ condition.

Virginia said Jones would remain in the hospital overnight.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY